Like many ambitious young Chinese, Zhao Junfeng studied hard in
college and graduate school so he could land a coveted job as a programmer at a
big Chinese internet company.
اضافة اعلان
After finishing graduate school in 2019, he joined an e-commerce
company in the eastern Chinese city of Nanjing, got married and adopted a cat
named Mango. In November 2021, he moved to Shanghai to join one of China’s
biggest video platforms, iQiyi. He was on track to achieve a much-desired
middle-class life, documenting his rise on his social media account.
Then barely a month into his new job, he was let go when iQiyi laid
off more than 20% of its staff.
The ranks of the unemployed technology workers are swelling as
China’s once vibrant internet industry is hit by a harsh and capricious
regulatory crackdown. Under the direction of China’s top leader, Xi Jinping,
the government’s unbridled hand is meddling in big ways and small, leaving
companies second-guessing their strategies and praying to not become the next
targets for crackdown.
In place of the pride and ambition that dominated a few years
ago, fear and gloom now rule as many tech companies lower their growth targets
and lay off young, well-educated workers.
Like their U.S. counterparts, China’s biggest tech companies are
regulated to limit abuses of power and to mitigate systemic risks. But
Beijing’s hyperpolitical approach shows that it is more about the Communist
Party taking control of the industry than about leveling the playing field.
The crackdown is killing the innovation, creativity and
entrepreneurial spirit that made China a tech power in the past decade. It is
destroying companies, profits and jobs that used to attract China’s best and
brightest.
Even people within the system are alarmed by the heavy-handed
approach. The former head of China’s sovereign wealth fund urged restrictions
on the power of regulators. Hu Xijin, the newly retired editor of the official
newspaper Global Times and an infamous propagandist, said he hoped that
regulatory actions should help make most companies healthier instead of leaving
them “dying on the operating table.”
The damage has been done. Some internet companies have been
forced to shut down, while others are suffering from huge losses or
disappointing earnings. Many publicly listed companies have seen their share
prices fall by half, if not more.
In the third quarter of last year, China’s biggest internet
company, Tencent, posted its slowest revenue growth since its public listing in
2004. E-commerce giant Alibaba’s profitability declined 38% from a year
earlier.
Didi, once the most valuable startup in the country, reported an
operating loss of $6.3 billion for the first nine months of 2021. In July,
authorities stopped Didi from signing up new users and ordered app stores to
remove its services pending a cybersecurity investigation.
The online-education and tutoring sector has nearly been
eliminated after Beijing decided that the businesses created unnecessary
burdens for parents and children, hindering a push to bolster the country’s low
birthrates. Hundreds of thousands of people, if not millions, have lost their
jobs.
Online social media and entertainment platforms are pulling
popular content and influencers, wary of repeated government warnings that
their products and stars are not ideologically appropriate for the young.
The video platform that laid off Zhao, iQiyi, had an abysmal
quarter, losing about $268 million. Its share prices fell 85% from their high
in 2021, reflecting investors’ concerns that the company, once aspiring to be
China’s Netflix, will be short of shows that can attract more subscribers and
advertisers.
“The biggest problem for our industry is severe shortage of
content supply,” iQiyi’s CEO, Gong Yu, told analysts in November. He blamed, in
part, censors’ slow approval. IQiyi did not respond to requests for comment.
(Zhao confirmed the details in his social media account but
declined to comment further.)
Many film, TV and streaming projects have been canceled or
killed over concerns of increasingly harsh and unpredictable censorship, said
people in the industry.
One of the most anticipated movies for the 2021 Christmas season
had to change its name to “Fire on the Plain,” from “Moses on the Plain,”
possibly because of its Christianity reference. Then four days before its
release, the production team said it was postponed, without giving an
explanation.
“Restrict this, cancel that. Regulate this, censor that,” Chen
Jian, a stock market investor, wrote on the social media platform Weibo. This
country “will become a cultural desert eventually.”
Beijing wants its cyberspace to become a tool of governance and
national rejuvenation. And it will penalize anyone who fails to serve the goal.
In mid-December, the country’s internet regulator said it had
ordered platforms to shut down more than 20,000 accounts of top influencers in
2021, including people who spoke ill of the country’s martyrs, entertainers
involved in scandals and major livestreaming stars.
Alibaba was slapped with a record $2.8 billion antitrust fine in
September. That was followed by a $530 million fine of Meituan, the food
delivery giant, a month later.
Weibo, China’s Twitter-like platform, was fined 44 times between
January and November. Douban, the popular film- and book-reviewing site, was
fined 20 times.
In December, Huang Wei, a top influencer known as Viya who sells
about everything under the sun on Alibaba’s Taobao platform — from Kim
Kardashian’s fragrance (hawking 6,000 bottles in the first 30 seconds) to a
rocket launch service (for $5.6 million) — was fined $210 million for tax
evasion. She lost more than 100 million followers after all her social media
accounts were shut down.
To prove their loyalty, many tech firms are positioning
themselves to help build key technologies that will help the country break free
from what Xi described as “stranglehold” weaknesses that the United States can
exploit. That includes semiconductors, new energy and other advanced
technologies.
A Beijing-based venture capitalist said his firm had given up on
investing in consumer tech completely and has been busy persuading scientists
and semiconductor engineers to start businesses. It has not been easy because
not many scientists have the entrepreneurial drive, said the venture
capitalist, who spoke on the condition of anonymity given the political
environment.
Li Chengdong, an e-commerce consultant who invests in startups,
said some consumer internet companies he owned were are struggling with higher
compliance costs. “To stay on the safe side, they have to be stricter in
compliance than what the government requires,” he said.
The crackdowns are having a chilling effect on the job market.
Many young Chinese are looking to the public sector for more stable positions,
even though they pay less.
There will be 10 million college graduates in China in 2022,
according to the Education Ministry. About 4.5 million have applied to graduate
schools, up 800,000 from 2021. More than 2 million people have applied to take
civil servant examinations, up by 500,000, according to the Chinese state
media.
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